International Development Research Centre
For Research On Barriers To Women’s Economic Empowerment And Economic Growth In Low-income Countries
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Amount$1,000,000
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Program
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Date Awarded4/11/2013
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Term60.0 Months
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Type of SupportProject
Strategies
Overview
Bringing together support from the Hewlett Foundation and the U.K.’s Department for International Development with its own funding, the International Development Research Centre will undertake a program of research to improve economic outcomes for poor women in low-income countries. The project will improve the evidence base on relationships between women’s economic empowerment and macroeconomic growth, and examine the impacts of women’s dual roles as carers and earners on their economic participation and contributions. The research program is also designed to strengthen researcher-policy links and build professional and organizational capacity in low-income countries to take up research on women’s economic status.
About the Grantee
Grantee Website
www.idrc.ca
Address
150 Kent Street, Ottawa, Ontario, K1P 0B2, Canada
Grants to this Grantee
for Communauté d’Afrique Francophone sur les Données Ouvertes to strengthen capacity & gender equity
As part of Canada’s foreign affairs and development efforts, the International Development Research Centre (IDRC) champions and funds research and innovation within and alongside developing regions to drive global change. It invests in high-quality research in developing countries, shares knowledge with researchers and policymakers for greater uptake and use, and mobilizes global alliances to build a more sustainable and inclusive world. This grant will allow IDRC to continue to advance the use and sharing of data to address critical development challenges in Francophone Africa through the Communauté d'Afrique Francophone sur les Données Ouvertes (CAFDO), consolidating its growing list of achievements since 2017 and leadership role in the regional data community. CAFDO is part of the Data for Development (D4D) Network, a global alliance of Global South-based research organizations funded by IDRC that works to strengthen collaboration and mobilize the knowledge needed to advance the use of data to address critical development challenges. (Strategy: Inclusive Governance)
for support of the Partnership for Evidence and Equity in Responsive Social Systems (PEERSS)
The International Development Research Centre funds research in low- and middle-income countries to promote growth and reduce poverty. This grant supports the second phase of the Rapid and Responsive Evidence Partnership. Twelve research centers from low- and middle-income countries across sub-Saharan Africa will respond to inquiries from policymakers within 30 days, helping governments scope problems, find ways to address them, and resolve implementation challenges. These institutions will also work to build bridges between evidence organizations. Through a sharing of tacit knowledge and experiences, this work will accelerate the spread of promising practices for promoting evidence use in the nonhealth Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in sub-Saharan Africa. This work advances our Evidence-Informed Policymaking strategy’s goal of governments drawing on timely, relevant information to improve decisions.
for support of testing models for tailored guidance in care policy process in East Africa
Building on the Growth and Economic Opportunities for Women (GrOW) East Africa Initiative, this grant to the International Development Research Centre (IDRC) will support testing models for tailored guidance in women's economic empowerment and care policy processes. IDRC will partner with East African think tanks to rapidly produce demand-driven evidence, provide capacity strengthening, and build coalitions with women’s rights advocates to influence macroeconomic policies that will reduce and redistribute unpaid care. The project aims to generate, synthesize, and translate evidence on the care economy for gender-responsive COVID recovery efforts, specifically in Rwanda, Ethiopia, and Kenya. (Strategy: Women's Economic Empowerment)